Google Maps with R
The gvisMap function reads a data.frame and creates text output referring to the Google Visualisation API, which can be included into a web page, or as a stand-alone page.
gvisMap(data, locationvar = "", tipvar = "", options = list(), chartid)
data |
a |
locationvar |
column name of
|
tipvar |
column name of |
options |
list of configuration options for Google Map. https://developers.google.com/chart/interactive/docs/gallery/map#Configuration_Options The parameters can be set via a named list. The parameters have to map those of the Google documentation.
For more details see the Google API documentation and the R examples below. |
chartid |
character. If missing (default) a random chart id will be
generated based on chart type and |
The maps are the well known Google Maps.
gvisMap returns list
of class
"gvis
" and "list
".
An object of class "gvis
" is a list containing at least the
following components:
type
Google visualisation type
chartid
character id of the chart object. Unique chart ids are required to place several charts on the same page.
html
a list with the building blocks for a page
header
a character string of a html page header:
<html>...<body>
,
chart
a named character vector of the chart's building blocks:
jsHeader
Opening <script>
tag and
reference to Google's JavaScript library.
jsData
JavaScript function defining the input
data
as a JSON object.
jsDrawChart
JavaScript function combing the data with the visualisation API and user options.
jsDisplayChart
JavaScript function calling the handler to display the chart.
jsFooter
End tag </script>
.
jsChart
Call of the jsDisplayChart
function.
divChart
<div>
container to embed the chart
into the page.
caption
character string of a standard caption, including data name and chart id.
footer
character string of a html page footer:
</body>...</html>
, including the used R and googleVis version
and link to Google's Terms of Use.
Markus Gesmann markus.gesmann@gmail.com,
Diego de Castillo decastillo@gmail.com
Google Chart Tools API: https://developers.google.com/chart/interactive/docs/gallery/map
See also print.gvis
, plot.gvis
for printing and
plotting methods, gvisGeoChart
for an alternative to gvisMap
.
## Please note that by default the googleVis plot command ## will open a browser window and requires Internet ## connection to display the visualisation. ## Example with latitude and longitude information ## Plot Hurricane Andrew (1992) storm path: data(Andrew) M1 <- gvisMap(Andrew, "LatLong" , "Tip", options=list(showTip=TRUE, showLine=TRUE, enableScrollWheel=TRUE, mapType='hybrid', useMapTypeControl=TRUE, width=800,height=400)) plot(M1) ## Example with address, here UK post-code and some html code in tooltip df <- data.frame(Postcode=c("EC3M 7HA", "EC2P 2EJ"), Tip=c("<a href='https://www.lloyds.com'>Lloyd's</a>", "<a href='https://www.guildhall.cityoflondon.gov.uk/'>Guildhall</a>")) M2 <- gvisMap(df, "Postcode", "Tip", options=list(showTip=TRUE, mapType='normal', enableScrollWheel=TRUE)) plot(M2) ## Change mapping icons M3 <- gvisMap(df, "Postcode", "Tip", options=list(showTip=TRUE, mapType='normal', enableScrollWheel=TRUE, icons=paste0("{", "'default': {'normal': 'https://icons.iconarchive.com/", "icons/icons-land/vista-map-markers/48/", "Map-Marker-Ball-Azure-icon.png',\n", "'selected': 'https://icons.iconarchive.com/", "icons/icons-land/vista-map-markers/48/", "Map-Marker-Ball-Right-Azure-icon.png'", "}}"))) plot(M3)
Please choose more modern alternatives, such as Google Chrome or Mozilla Firefox.